In this blog I present the results of my research into the landowning families of the British Isles and the country houses which they owned. Comments, especially in the form of corrections, additional information or new illustrations, are very welcome. Please use the Contact Form in the right hand side bar to contact me privately or the comments facility at the bottom of the page to make a public comment.

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Saturday, 10 August 2013

(62) Ainslie of Delgatie Castle

The Ainslie family which is the subject of this post, and the Ainslies of West Torrington (see the next post), shared a common ancestor in the 16th century.

Robert Ainslie WS (1734-95) moved from
Darnchester near Coldstream to Berrywell House, Duns to take up the post of
land agent to Lord Douglas’ Berwickshire estates. His eldest son, Robert Ainslie (1766-1838)
was a friend of the poet Burns, who left an account of a visit to the Borders
in the company of Ainslie, during which he stayed several times at Berrywell
and enjoyed the company of the latter’s sister, Rachel. Robert senior's second son, Sir Whitelaw Ainslie
(1767-1837) became medical superintendent of southern India, and was knighted
in 1835, the year he published a materia
medica for the sub-continent. The
third son, Douglas Ainslie (1771-1850) became a land surveyor and agent in
succession to his father and bought Delgaty Castle in Aberdeenshire and Blervie
House (Morayshire) towards the end of his life.
Having no children of his own, he bequeathed this to his niece, Jane
Catherine Grant-Duff (1801-66), the daughter of Sir Whitelaw Ainslie and wife
of James Grant-Duff (1789-1858), on condition that her second son took the name
of Ainslie and named his eldest son Douglas.

Jane died in 1866 and her second son, Ainslie Douglas Grant-Duff
(1838-1929), duly took the name Ainslie
later that year. He gave up a career in
the Diplomatic Service and took up residence at Delgatie Castle, later
qualifying as a barrister in the English courts. He sold Blervie in c.1907 to Capt. Harold Bessemer
Galloway, who built a new house on the estate in 1909-11 to the designs of J.M. Dick
Peddie, but Delgatie passed to his eldest son Douglas Ainslie
(1865-1948), a contemporary and friend of Oscar Wilde at Oxford, who also
associated with Aubrey Beardsley and Walter Pater.He became a poet, translator and critic, and
in 1922 published a lively volume of autobiography, Adventures Social and Literary, but remained unmarried; he moved to
Hollywood and died there after the Second World War.Unfortunately, by then Delgatie was seriously
affected by dry rot.Six years of
wartime occupation by the army left it derelict and in the opinion of some
surveyors, beyond saving.Ainslie’s
executors sold it in 1948 to the Countess of Erroll, whose Hay forbears had
built it and owned it until 1762, and she presented it to Capt. John Hay
(1906-97) who successfully restored it.

Delgatie Castle, Turriff, Aberdeenshire

A
five storey L-plan tower house built (perhaps by the Catholic Conn family of
Auchry) in 1570-79 for the Hays of Erroll, with a corbelled parapet, bartisans,
crowsteps and harled walls; it belongs to the same group of castles as Towie
Barclay, and may incorporate some earlier work. It was repaired after damage in 1594 (the
masons marks on the upper part are different to those lower down) and the
earlier interiors are of that date; it was extended in the early 17th century with a crowstepped wing, and further wings were added in c.1768 and extended
in c.1800 in the Gothick style for the Hon. Sir Alexander Duff.

Delgatie Castle, showing the original tower and later Gothick extensions

The house is entered through a splendid
groin-vaulted vestibule, and the rooms within retain their original
proportions, although redecorated in later times. A notably wide turnpike stair provides access
to the rib-vaulted solar on the first floor, and several rooms with magnificent
tempera-painted ceilings of 1592-97 on the second floor. The hall was remodelled as a ballroom c.1830,
and other interiors including the North Drawing Room are about the same date;
the ballroom bay window is about 1850, perhaps by A. & W. Reid. The circular dovecote is 16th century, and the park contains a bridge, a circular icehouse, and a well with a
lion’s head, all built in 1815 to celebrate Waterloo. The north lodge of 1830 is classical with a
pyramid roof and Doric columns; the Greengate Lodge of 1854 by A. & W.
Reid, has urns, pretty diagonal chimneys, and a three-storey crowstepped tower.

Delgatie Castle: a painted ceiling restored in 1957-59.

The house became badly infected by dry rot in
the early 20th century and after six years of army use 1940-46 was
derelict. The Countess of Erroll bought
it back in 1948 and it was restored for Capt. John Hay (chiefly in 1957-59 by
Leo Durnin (architecture) and V. Sozonov (painted ceilings)) and opened as a
Clan Hay Heritage Centre. It has been
open to the public since 1994.

Descent:
Hay
Earls of Erroll until after ’45 when James Hay, 15th Earl of Erroll (1726-78)
sold 1762 to Peter Garden of Troup; to son, who sold 1798 to James Duff, 2nd Earl of Fife (1729-1809), who let to The Hon. Gen. Sir Alexander Duff (d. 1851)...sold
c.1843 to Douglas Ainslie (1771-1850); to niece, Jane Catherine Grant-Duff (c.1801-66);
to son, Ainslie Douglas Grant-Duff (later Ainslie) (b. 1838); to son, Douglas
Ainslie (1865-1948); sold after his death to Diana Denyse Hay, 23rd Countess of Erroll (1926-78); to Capt. John
Hay (1906-97), who restored it.

Blervie House, Forres, Morayshire

There have been three successive houses at Blervie, all of which
still stand, at least in part.

The earliest is Blervie
Tower, a ruined late 16th century,
5-storey square tower built for the Dunbar family, and formerly part of a castle
of earlier build (said to have been dated 1398), which was taken down in the 18th century to provide building materials for the new Blervie House. It is built of rubble with ashlar dressings
and has a circular stair turret on the south side. The late 16th century chimneypiece
of the former first floor hall is exposed; the vaulted undercroft has some
early gun loops.

Blervie House (now Blervie Mains)

This house was replaced
in 1776 by Blervie House (now Blervie Mains House), a south facing symmetrical
two storey five bay house built for The Hon Major Lewis Duff. It is built of squared rubble with ashlar dressings
including rusticated quoins, and has a slightly advanced centre gabletted bay
with rusticated doorcase and small attic window. There is a later single storey, three bay rear
wing. Inside, the hall contains a
cantilevered staircase rising the full height of the house around a square
stairwell; the stair treads with moulded risers are reused. The twisted wrought-iron balusters between
ground and first floor give way to turned wooden balusters above. The rooms have simple moulded ceiling cornices,
raised and fielded panelled doors and window shutters. The dining room has a black
marble chimneypiece, the drawing room a later 19th century carved chimneypiece
with white marble slip; an attic room has a late 17th century moulded
chimneypiece from Blervie Castle.

Blervie House: entrance front in 2012

Blervie House in turn was superseded in 1909-11 by a new house of the
same name on a different site, designed by J.M. Dick Peddie for the new owner
of the estate, Capt. H.B. Galloway, who bought Blervie c.1907, and subsequently
remodelled by Michael Laird. It is a
substantial Edwardian classical mansion
of two storeys, with a twelve bay entrance front and ten bay garden front. Like
its predecessor it is built of coursed rubble stone, with tooled and polished
ashlar dressings and margins. The east-facing entrance front has angle pilaster
strips, a slightly advanced centre of two bays and two bay projecting ends,
giving a 2-3-2-3-2 rhythm. The centre
has a wide segmental pediment and a porte cochere supported by two pairs of
Roman Doric columns; the first floor windows have moulded lintels and Gibbsian
detailing.

Blervie House: garden front in 2012

The west-facing garden front
has six segmental dormer windows and wide advanced outer bays each with a shallow
projecting bowed three-light window rising the full height of the house; the
centre two bays have giant channelled angle pilaster strips under a wide
segmental-headed pediment, and there are French windows in bays three and
eight. A lower two storey serving wing
dated 1907, and thus presumably built first, is attached to the south
gable.

Blervie House: hall and staircase in 2012

Blervie House: drawing room in 2012

Inside, there is a spacious but austere
interior with simple moulded cornices, window shutters and door frames. The central
vaulted top lit stairhall has an arcaded screen supported by paired Roman Doric
columns and a wooden staircase with balusters and a wide moulded handrail. The drawing room has a simple chimneypiece at
each end with the mantel shelf supported by paired slender columns, and sliding
doors to divide the room. At the end of
a long driveway are a pair of gatepiers, probably of 1776 and moved to their present
site from Blervie Mains House.

Ainslie, Robert (1734-95), of Berrywell House, Duns (Berwicks). Second son of Robert Ainslie (1683-1762) and his wife Magdeline, daughter of Gilbert Elliot of Stonedge, born 8 January 1734. Writer to the signet; land agent to Lord Douglas in Berwickshire. He married, 20 March 1765, Katherine (d. 1803), daughter of John Whitelaw of Whitelaw, and had issue:(1) Robert Ainslie (1766-1838) of Darnchester (Berwicks) and Edinburgh, born 13 January 1766; friend of the poet Burns and accompanied him on a tour of Teviotdale and Berwickshire, 1787; writer to the signet, 1798; in later life an elder of the Church of Scotland, he published two devotional works and a defence of the Scottish system of banking; m.1, 3 January 1799, Jane (1781-1817), daughter of Lt. Col. James Cunninghame of Balbougie and had issue; and m.2 18 October 1837, Isabella (1789/90-1862), daughter of Rev. Robert Munro of Ullapool; died 11 April 1838;(2) Sir Whitelaw Ainslie (1767-1837) (q.v.);(3) Rachel Ainslie (1768-69), born 19 March 1768; died in infancy, 14 November 1769;(4) Douglas Ainslie (b. & d. 1769), born 23 October 1769; died in infancy;(5) Douglas Ainslie (1771-1850) (q.v.);(6) James Ainslie (b. 1772); served in Royal Scots Greys at Battle of Waterloo, 1815, but later emigrated to Australia where he established a settlement at Duntroon; lived with an aboriginal woman by whom he had a daughter (Nanny); returned to Scotland, 1835;(6) Rachel Ainslie (d. 1828), admired by the poet Burns; died unmarried, 14 December 1828.He owned a small estate at Darnchester in Berwickshire, but moved to Duns to act as land agent to Lord Douglas.He died 10 April 1795. His widow died 18 December 1803.Ainslie, Douglas (1771-1850), of Delgatie Castle. Fourth son of Robert Ainslie (1734-95) and his wife Katherine, daughter of John Whitelaw of Whitelaw, born 6 May 1771. Land agent in Berwickshire in succession to his father. He was unmarried and without issue.In 1843 he purchased the Delgatie (Aberdeenshire) and Blervie (Morayshire) estates and he bequeathed these to his niece, Jane Catherine Grant-Duff (q.v.).He died 19 August 1850, aged 79.Ainslie, Sir Whitelaw (1767-1837), kt. Second son of Robert Ainslie (1734-95) and his wife Katherine, daughter of John Whitelaw of Whitelaw, born 17 February 1767. After qualifying as a surgeon he joined the East India Company's service as an assistant surgeon in 1788 and was appointed garrison surgeon at Chingleput; promoted to surgeon, 1784 and superintendent surgeon, 1810; retired 1815 with a gratuity of 600 guineas from the company, and returned to Scotland, where he devoted himself to writing on medicine and the history of India. His major work was published as the Materia medica of Hindustan, 1813 and expanded to the Materia medica Indica, 1826, and was the first full-length study of Indian medicines to appear in English. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 1829 and was knighted by King William IV, 10 June 1835. He married Janet Mary (1780-1840), daughter of Lt. Col. James Cunninghame of Balbougie (the sister of his older brother's wife) and had issue:(1) Jane Catherine Ainslie (later Grant-Duff) (1801-66) (q.v.).He died 29 April 1837. His widow died 27 March 1840.Grant-Duff (née Ainslie), Jane Catherine (1801-66), of Delgatie Castle. Only child of Sir Whitelaw Ainslie (1767-1837) and his wife Janet Mary, daughter of Lt. Col. James Cunninghame of Balbougie, born 1801. She married, 1827, James Cunninghame Grant-Duff (1789-1858) of Eden and had issue:(1) James Grant-Duff, died in infancy;(2) Mary Cunninghame Grant-Duff (1828-45), died unmarried;(3) Sir Mountstuart Elphinstone Grant-Duff (1829-1906) of Eden, CIE, GCSI; educated at Edinburgh Academy, Balliol College, Oxford (matriculated 1847; BA 1850; MA 1853) and Inner Temple (called to the bar, 1854); MP for Elgin Burghs, 1857-81; Under-Secretary for India, 1868-74; Under-Secretary for the Colonies, 1880-81; Governor of Madras, 1881-86; sold the Eden estate, 1875 and lived at York House, Twickenham, 1875-96 and later on a small estate near Colchester (Essex); Rector of Aberdeen University, 1866-72; President of Royal Geographical Society, 1889-92 and of the Royal Historical Society, 1892-99; trustee of British Museum, 1903-06; m. April 1859 Anna Julia (d. 1915), daughter of Edward Webster and his wife Hannah Ainsworth [see post 65 on Ainsworths of Smithills Hall], and had issue five sons and five daughters; died in London, January 1906;(4) Margaret Grant-Duff (1833-35)(5) Ainslie Douglas Grant-Duff (later Ainslie) (1838-1929) (q.v.)(6) Alice Jane Grant-Duff (d. 1891), m. 1859 in Switzerland, Dr. Gaspar Obrist of Zurich and had issue two sons.She inherited the Delgatie Castle and Blervie House estates from her uncle, Douglas Ainslie, in 1850, on condition that her second son took the name of Ainslie and named his eldest son Douglas.She died 1 May 1866. Her husband died 23 September 1858.Ainslie (né Grant-Duff), Ainslie Douglas (1838-1929), of Delgatie Castle. Second son of James Cunninghame Grant-Duff (1789-1858) of Eden and his wife Jane Catherine, daughter of Sir Whitelaw Ainslie, born 9 July 1838. Educated at Balliol College, Oxford In HM Diplomatic Service in Paris, 1859-66, but resigned and changed his name to Ainslie on coming into the Delgatie and Blervie estates. Called to the bar at the Inner Temple, 1874. JP and DL for Aberdeenshire. He married, 1863, Frances, daughter of Edward J. Morgan of St. Petersburg (Russia), and had issue:(1) Douglas Ainslie (1865-1948) (q.v.);(2) Percival Ainslie (1867-94), m. 1891 Beatrice Stewart Marion Brabazon (d. 1904), daughter of C.W. Moore (who m.2 Capt. Cecil Henry Hunt), and had issue one daughter;(3) Julian Ainslie (1870-1937), m.1, 1893, Florence (d. 1897 in a carriage accident), daughter of Sir Nicholas Elphinstone and had issue two daughters; m.2, 15 December 1898, Juliet Molesworth and had issue a daughter; and m.3, Gertrude Mayne; died 1937;(4) Edith Fanny (known as Rachel) Ainslie (later Grant-Duff) (1873-1934);(5) Edward Ainslie (1876-79), died young.He inherited the Delgatie Castle and Blervie House estates from his mother in 1866, but sold Blervie in 1908.He died 15 December 1929.

Douglas Ainslie
as a diplomat

Ainslie, (Grant Duff) Douglas (1865-1948), of Delgatie Castle and Hollywood (USA). Eldest son of Ainslie Douglas Ainslie (1838-1929) and his wife Frances, daughter of Edward J. Morgan of St. Petersburg (Russia), born in Paris, 1865. Educated at Eton and Exeter College, Oxford (matriculated 1884; BA 1886); served briefly in the diplomatic service; poet and literary critic; friend and briefly lover of Oscar Wilde (a contemporary at Oxford) and also an associate of Aubrey Beardsley and Walter Pater; translated twelve volumes of the works of the Italian philosopher, Benedetto Croce, into English, 1909-24, and also Dandyism, byJules-Amédée Barbey d'Aurevilly; published Escarlamonde and other poems, 1893; John of Damascus, 1901; The Song of the Stewarts: Prelude, 1909; Mirage, 1911; Adventures Social and Literary, 1922; Chosen Poems, 1925 and The Conquest of Pleasure, 1942; emigrated to America and lived mainly in Hollywood. He was unmarried and without issue.He inherited the Delgatie Castle estate from his father in 1929 but never occupied the house, which was requisitioned for military use and which had become derelict by the time of his death.He died 27 March 1948; his will was proved in London, 22 December 1949 (estate in England £260).

About Me

I was educated at St Paul's School in London and Keble College, Oxford and went on to train as an archivist in the world-famous Bodleian Library. I spent 37 years as a professional archivist, and was Chairman of the National Council on Archives from 2001 to 2005, and Head of Archives Sector Development and Secretary of the Historical Manuscripts Commission at the National Archives from 2005 until I retired in May 2015.

Alongside my professional career I have also been an architectural historian of the country house. This is a passion nurtured at Oxford, where I was President of the University Architectural Society. Between 1989 and 2001 my three volume study of The country houses of Gloucestershire was published, and my distinctive contribution has been to put together the evidence for the history of country houses and landed estates that can be gleaned from family archives and genealogy with the evidence from the buildings themselves, to tell a richer narrative than any of these sources alone can provide. I am now embarked on an ambitious blog (http://landedfamilies.blogspot.co.uk), which aims to tell the story of every landed family in the British Isles and their country houses. If I continue working hard until I am a centenarian I might finish the job!

Since one big project is never enough, I am also involved as a Trustee and volunteer with the Victoria County History of England, which aims to tell the story of every English village and town, and I do some advisory work for the National Trust, which looks after so many of the country houses I care passionately about.

I have been married for 37 years to my precious and special wife Mary, who mercifully tolerates my obsessions and collections, and even my cooking.